On August 7th I had a craniotomy to remove a meningioma (brain tumour). This link explains the procedure from a medical perspective. I am sure that the patient craniotomy experience would be different from person to person but this was my mine;

an IV in my right arm which is where they injected the anesthesia

a second IV was placed in my opposite arm

a central line (another IV) in my neck

a catheter in my bladder

a breathing tube down my throat

sensors were placed in my face to monitor nerve activity and align the MRI image

my head was clamped in 3 placed to the operating table (2 along my hair-line in the front and one in the rear)

the MRI was aligned with my physical head

my skin was cut

a loonie sized piece of my skull was removed from behind my left ear

the tumour was removed and the point of origin was cauterised

a titanium plate that looks like a snowflake was screwed to my head and my skin stapled back together with 14 staples

a dressing was placed over the incision with 3 staples

when the clamps were removed my forehead started to bleed, after 15 minutes of pressure the surgeon couldn’t get the wound to stop bleeding and placed 3 staples to stop the bleeding

I was wheeled to the operating room just after 8 am, surgery was completed by 1:15 pm and I was transferred to the recovery room and at some point the breathing tube was removed. I woke up in the ICU around 2pm and man did I have a headache.

What I remember from my ICU stay was;

My first thought was “I am alive”

I had a private nurse her name was Debbi and she was lovely

In addition to all of the tubes mentioned above I also had oxygen tubes, a clip on my ear and a pile of wires

I wore electric compression stockings which filled up with air and massaged my legs, I loved them

the beds were cool but I hated them. The bed was similar to a massage chair where there was movement under the surface. It would have been lovely had I not just had my brain messed with, so they turned off the movement feature.

I had blood taken a few times from one of the IV lines

my eyes were crusted shut for a while

sleeping connected to so much stuff and being woken every 2 hours meant that I didn’t get much sleep

These are some of the pictures from my 24 hours in the ICU. It gives an idea of the shape I was in. There were 10 beds in the ICU and I was the least sick person. I can’t even imagine how the other people were feeling because I wasn’t doing too hot.

The most important thing is that Timmy was removed in his entirety and that he wasn’t cancer. The operation was a complete success.